flowerlandfilms
Well-known member
- First Name
- Eryk
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2020
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- Location
- Australia
- Vehicles
- Yamaha SRV-250, Honda Odyssey RB1
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- Film Maker
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This is the picture that everyone should be looking at - we need more of this 3D rendering because perspective shifting is tearing this community apart!Just adding my two cents (or nonsense) to the discussion.
Doing a quick overlay of a 3D model (Thank you Lizard_FPV) and trying to do a camera match without being certain if anything in the frame is square, level, or parallel with anything else in the scene...
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...it doesn't line up perfectly, but is close enough to convince me that the photo is legit.
The sign on the ceiling says powder coating. It also looks like it is on a big skid that can slide probably back to the right on the picture into an oven. My bet is they are powder coating because they need to protect the steel and since the stainless exoskeleton will be structurally glued to the inner body the powder coating will be a stronger bond than paint. They probably coated the aluminum casting to prevent galvanic corrosion between the stainless body.Probably anti-corrosion coating (undercoating) combo sound deadening material?…maybe
They never said frame or 100% stainless. They pushed a stainless exoskeleton and happened to use a gray primer on the inner body panels. I have been preaching an inner steel body for years (with much push back on this forum I might add). Tesla is crazy efficient. They would never build a stainless inner body. Stainless is 2x steel cost.I understand that but from the start we’ve been led to believe that the frame of this truck is 30x stainless
from NEWtonFINALLY something NEW![]()
Your perspective is off. The top of your red outline on the body already doesn’t line up with the roof. This is the real thing.
It just clicked. I think many of us saw they white plastic wrapped delivery and thought it was the stainless exoskeleton because the shape matches so closely. But what was under that wrap is this inner body in the post!Betting no.
that’s the same wrap we saw roll in there a month ago on the bodies, sitting behind. Kinda looks like it anyway.
Thread: https://www.cybertruckownersclub.com/forum/threads/new-cybertruck-body-shell-photos-taken-inside-giga-texas-?.5660/
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I think it’s one big casting otherwise they wouldn’t have needed that larger press. The smaller press could have handled this as the two smaller sections would have been about the size of the model y casting.Looks 100% legit to me.
I find it interesting how much space there is between the two rear frame rails. It is also missing the typical cross-members you would expect. It is painted so I think they’d be installed at this step in manufacturing. So this brings up the question, what’s going to go there? Are they going to have additional batteries below the truck bed? Kind of makes sense.
Another’s thing is it looks like two separate casings in the back. So will there be a total of 3 castings per vehicle (1 front, 2 back)?
And to answer an earlier question, you can definitely weld mild steel to stainless. You can also bond aluminum to stainless with standard automotive adhesives that are reported to be as strong (or stronger) than welding.
Everyone saying looks like two rear castings is making stuff up. Point to one part of this image that shows a break or two castings. There’s isn’t one. That’s why they brought in the giga press. It’s what we have been waiting for. It shipped in October ready to assemble and use and we are seeing the result of that. This is very likely the final version of those castings. And this is the version they will be doing the testing on.Kinda small to be gigacastings. But they really show an amount of strength in the wings I predicted - they're essential to the strength of the vehicle.
No motor mount points in this sub-assembly.
-Crissa